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Wednesday, December 17, 2025

12/17 Links Pt1: Douglas Murray: The Massacre at Bondi Beach Was Inevitable; NGO Monitor: Amnesty International Australia Insists on the Right to Intimidate Jews

From Ian:

Douglas Murray: The Massacre at Bondi Beach Was Inevitable
There will be plenty said in the coming days about why the two perpetrators (father and son) were allowed to own guns, despite their connections with individuals jailed for plotting terror attacks. There will be many questions raised about how their shooting spree could go on for almost ten minutes and why the Australian police were so unprepared for it. There will be questions about why a Jewish event celebrating Hannukah on the beach was not better protected, given the escalating risks against Australian Jews. And there will be official expressions of mourning for the 15 victims counted so far, ranging from a ten-year-old girl to an elderly Holocaust survivor who died sheltering his wife.

But the main question is why the Australian authorities did not take the concerns of Jewish Australians seriously, and why indeed they spent the last two years pandering to the ever-growing contingent of Muslim immigrants and others who have clearly been on the path to radicalization. It will not be enough for them to say that they did not know.

Far from tamping down the problem, the Anthony Albanese government has been viciously maligning Israel since October 7, 2023. It has expressly tried to stop people from correcting those denigrations. It has allowed mass incitement every week on Australian streets and tried to bar those who oppose such incitement.

If anyone thinks that this is an edge case, they do not need to look simply at the blood spilled on Bondi Beach. They merely have to ask a question many of us have asked for the past two years: What other group would expect to be treated like this?

In 2019, there was a terrible attack on a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, by a lone gunman. It was a vicious, appalling attack. Outpourings of sympathy issued from all communities.

But imagine for a moment that there had not been. Imagine that immediately after that attack there had been huge crowds of Australians outside the Sydney opera house calling for Muslims or Arabs to be “gassed.”

Does anyone think that the Australian authorities would have taken this lightly? Does anyone think that if there had been anti-Muslim or anti-Arab demonstrations on the streets every week for the two years following the 2019 attack—expressly celebrating the attack and calling for it to happen again—that the Australian authorities would have stood by, or actually placated the mob? To ask the question is to answer it.

In the meantime, Jews in Australia will be asking the same question that Jews in New York and around the world are asking. And they will be facing the same conundrum that Jews around the world now face. If they are in Israel, they are attacked. If they are outside Israel, they are attacked. And if they are in New York or other cities outside Israel, feeling increasingly unsafe and wondering whether to move to Israel, then—as happened at Park East Synagogue in New York City last month—they will be attacked as well.

The problem has been in plain sight all along. It’s shameful that so many people in positions of power decided to metaphorically shoot the messengers, while all the time clearing a path for the real-life shooters to take aim, and fire.
Gil Troy: Make terrorism backfire: Rescinding recognition of ‘Palestine’
As the world is shocked by the Bondi Beach Hanukkah massacre, and as experts pontificate about fighting abstractions like “hate,” too many ignore the most effective move Australia – and other countries – can make.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese should say: “Palestinian terrorists and their supporters keep trying to advance the Palestinian cause by slaughtering innocents, Jews and non-Jews alike. Today, rather than impotently claiming ‘terrorism doesn’t work,’ we will prove it with one action. Terrorism doesn’t work – it backfires: Australia hereby rescinds its recognition of a Palestinian state.”

Instead, after two antisemitic anti-Zionists murdered 15 innocents and wounded dozens, Albanese guaranteed that the problem won’t end; he claimed that Australia’s recognizing of a fictitious Palestinian state didn’t encourage the Jew-slaughter.

Such head-in-the-sand thinking is like denying the link between Hitler’s Mein Kampf and the Holocaust. Mein Kampf wasn’t just a bestseller, and Australia’s pro-Palestinian stance isn’t just a policy. Since the 1970s, the world has repeatedly rewarded Palestinian terrorism by advancing the Palestinian cause. Since Hamas’s unspeakable barbarism on October 7, it’s become super-trendy to enable terror and greenlight Jew-hatred.

When terrorism is rewarded
Ghazi Hamad, a Qatari-based Hamas leader whom Western useful idiots deemed “pragmatic,” called Australia and other countries recognizing a Palestinian state one of the “fruits of October 7.”

Hamas celebrated the recognition as an “important step” and a “deserved outcome of our people’s struggle.”

Terrorists aren’t stupid. Western leaders claim “terrorism never works,” yet their appeasement and cowardice spur more violence. That’s why since 2000, over 106,000 terrorist attacks worldwide have murdered 249,941 people. Since October 7, 8,670 terrorist attacks – including stone-throwing – occurred in Judea and Samaria.

There’s a fine line between exploiting a tragedy for political reasons and disincentivizing terrorism. But Bondi Beach wasn’t some natural disaster.
NGO Monitor: Amnesty International Australia Insists on the Right to Intimidate Jews
The Hanukkah massacre at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on December 11, 2025 – in which 15 people were murdered and scores injured – marks the worst violence targeting Jews in Australia’s history. It follows a surge in antisemitic incidents – including violent assaults – in recent years.

Despite the blatant rise in antisemitism, Amnesty International Australia, which claims to “challenge injustice wherever it happens,” has consistently vilified and actively opposed measures intended to protect Australian Jews.

In addition, between the Hamas-orchestrated October 7th attacks and the killings at Bondi Beach, Amnesty Australia appears not to have published a single standalone report, article, or statement on antisemitism in the country.1 (A feeble, watered-down January 22, 2025 statement that Amnesty Australia co-signed, referenced “escalating hate crimes on the Jewish community and on the Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian communities in Australia.”)

Surging antisemitism in Australia
The Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) publishes annual assessments, documenting both the overall number of antisemitic incidents in Australia, as well as categorizing them and describing specific events. Its data demonstrate a sharp increase in both the total number, as well as the severity, of antisemitic incidents in Australia.

ECAJ Report on Anti-Jewish Incidents in Australia 2025, published December 3, 2025

Moreover, according to the New South Wales Police Force, from October 11, 2023 – March 26, 2025, it had recorded 367 antisemitic incidents, alongside 38 classified as Islamophobic. Notably, “In addition to incidents reported to, or investigated by, the NSW Police, the Community Security Group has recorded many hundreds of antisemitic events of which many are not recorded on NSW Police systems.” 2


Bondi Beach Hanukkah killer charged with 59 offenses including terror, 15 counts of murder
The surviving gunman in Sydney’s Bondi Beach terror attack at a Jewish community event was charged Wednesday with 59 offenses, including 15 charges of murder, as Australian authorities were investigating the two perpetrators’ links to the Islamic State terror group.

Two terrorists slaughtered 15 people on Sunday in a mass shooting targeting Jews celebrating Hanukkah at Bondi Beach, and nearly 20 other people are still being treated in hospitals.

As investigations unfold, Australia faces a social and political reckoning about antisemitism, gun control, and whether police protections for Jews at events such as Sunday’s were sufficient for the threats they faced.

Naveed Akram, 24, faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted, Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett said in a statement on Wednesday.

Barrett said the investigation into the massacre is continuing and sent words of reassurance to the Jewish community. She said there is “no ongoing threat.”

“It is hard not to be moved by the weight of grief that is hanging over Sydney,” she said. “It is a reminder of the cruel and hateful act perpetrated against the Jewish community. As AFP commissioner, I say to Jewish Australians, you do not and you should not share this grief alone.”
Tony Abbott: My Statement on the Bondi Massacre
It’s our country’s great shame that the worst atrocity to befall Jewish people since the October 7 massacre should have taken place here.

The shooting down of 15 people attending a Hanukkah celebration was an act of depraved evil, relieved only by the heroism of some of the bystanders, especially Ahmed el Ahmed, who heroically wrestled a gun off one of the attackers.

Regrettably, this was just the latest escalation of the Jew hatred that’s afflicted our country in the two years since the October 7 atrocity, starting with Islamist preachers “rejoicing” in the carnage within hours of it taking place; continuing with the mob at the Opera House screaming “F—k the Jews”; and the Harbour Bridge marchers yelling “death to the IDF” and “globalise the Intifada”.

As was predicted, they’ve now got their wish.

From Australia’s leadership at every level there’s mostly been hand-wringing impotence: no hate preachers have been prosecuted or deported and no hate marches have been banned, even though these have gone way beyond any possible exercise of freedom of speech or protest into acts of harassment and intimidation.

We must do so much better to protect Jewish Australians and to restore the welcome that Jewish people have long had in this country which, at its best, has been an exemplar of the Judaeo-Christian ethos.
In Bondi, on the first night of Hanukkah, the intifada was truly globalised
Since the attacks of October 7th, 2023, there has been a societal-wide fury against Israel that has seen use of Holocaust inversion and anti-Semitic slurs by members of the Oireachtas, frenzied demonisation of Israel by some media and a sustained call to boycott Israel by Irish universities and members of the cultural community. We have been lectured on the subject of anti-Semitism by many, including former president Michael D Higgins, actors, comedians, writers, artists, trade unions, NGOs and others.

Many of these voices have coagulated into a baying mob, profoundly ignorant of the Jewish experience. They tell us we are paranoid, as our fears are dismissed by those who do not recognise anti-Semitism nor feel its effects. To those who march every weekend and chant “globalise the intifada”, understand what you have been calling for. In Bondi, on the first night of Hanukkah, the intifada was truly globalised.

For more than two years, I have tried to engage with the political class, explaining clearly that criticism of Israel does not automatically equate to anti-Semitism – there are millions of Jews who criticise Israel. However, the relentless demonisation of Zionism has spilled over into unabashed Jew hatred. The term “Zio”, an anti-Semitic slur popularised by a grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, has now entered common parlance, normalised and unchecked. A Sinn Fรฉin MEP posted the term on X recently without receiving a public reprimand by either the party or the EU parliament. At the time of writing, the post has still not been removed.

This hate-filled void in empathy creates the kind of nonsensical reasoning that has Kneecap band members admit they relied on their manager’s political knowledge – while spewing out dangerous messages and deflecting criticism with the claim that the real crime is in Gaza. The fawning embrace of Kneecap and their cohort of performative protesters has resulted in a climate that has totally undermined Jews in Ireland, leaving us fearful of what may come next.

So where does the relationship between Ireland and its Jews go from here? I do wonder if we may have hit an inflection point with the recent uproar over the proposal to rename Herzog Park by the cross-party commemorations committee of Dublin City Council. I watched the emergency meeting online two weeks ago. It was breathtaking. Seven councillors accused Israel, its security services and/or its agents of pressurising the Irish Government to intervene in the process to cancel the proposal; a reimagining of the classic anti-Semitic trope of global Jewish control. Conor Reddy of People Before Profit pronounced that “the State of Israel has no place in the civilised world”. Where does he propose the seven million Israeli Jews (half the global Jewish population) go and on what legal basis?

The reaction to this mindless targeting of a tiny park in the middle of a Jewish area, opposite the only Jewish schools in Ireland, has disturbed many, even some of the most anti-Israeli voices. They can see, in this act, that the symbolism of stripping the Herzog name from this location is an anti-Semitic act that seeks to punish the Jews of Ireland for the actions of Israel. We can only hope this is the nadir; that the massacre in Bondi straightens the moral compass within the Irish society.

It is past time that sections of the media and political establishment take responsibility for their role in creating this atmosphere and dial down the rhetoric. We know where hateful language leads.
Hen Mazzig: Bondi Beach shooting shows we can't 'debate' antisemitism
Jews make up roughly 2% of the U.S. population, yet they are targeted in a vastly disproportionate share of hate crimes.

Still, the response often follows a familiar script. Each attack is described as an “isolated incident.” This narrative is no longer credible. The killings in Sydney were neither unpredictable nor surprising. They were the result of antisemitism being treated as a debatable viewpoint rather than as an urgent threat.

Silence plays a central role in this process. It is not neutral. Silence, paired with vague expressions of sympathy, creates the conditions in which violence becomes possible. When leaders refuse to draw clear moral lines, they effectively signal that anti-Jewish incitement will carry no consequences.

This is not alarmism. It is pattern recognition. For Jews, recognizing danger early is not hysteria – it is a discipline shaped by history. Waiting for threats to become undeniable has always come at an unbearable cost.

At its core, Hanukkah is a story about that discipline. The miracle was not only that a small flame burned longer than expected. The deeper miracle was the decision to light it at all ‒ knowing it might fail, knowing it carried risk and choosing to proceed anyway.

Sustaining Jewish life today requires the same clarity and resolve. It means refusing to accept ambiguity when hatred is explicit and refusing to treat calls for violence as acceptable debate.

This moment demands a change in our civic response. It requires attention, moral seriousness and the courage to name antisemitism clearly ‒ before it escalates further.

Jews light candles this Hanukkah not to deny the darkness, but to assert something simple and necessary: Violence fueled by silence does not get the final word.
Hero cop who killed Bondi Beach terrorist with ‘once-in-a-lifetime shot’ is ID'd
The Australian cop believed to have single-handedly taken down the Bondi Beach terrorists with a “once-in-a-lifetime shot” has been identified as a tie-wearing local detective who appeared on a reality TV show to say he became a cop because he “hates crime.”

Detective Senior Constable Cesar “Cess” Barraza has been hailed a hero after he was filmed hiding behind a tree and then opening fire on the two rifle-toting suspects from roughly 130 feet away during Sunday’s massacre.

Barraza, who was wearing a standard detective’s uniform of a shirt and tie, was only armed with a handgun at the time.

His shots are believed to have killed 50-year-old killer Sajid Akram and then injured his 24-year-old son, Naveed Akram, just moments later.

Barraza, who joined the force 16 years ago, was previously featured on the Australian reality TV show “Recruits” — a series that follows young officers starting their careers.

Asked on the show why he wanted to be a cop, Barraza quickly responded: “Because I hate crime.”

The police veteran’s aim has widely been described by law enforcement as the shot of a lifetime, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Sources added that even the force’s best shooters would have struggled to hit a target from such a distance.


American who studied scripture in NYC intubated after being shot twice during Bondi Beach terrorist attack
An American citizen who recently studied in a Brooklyn yeshiva was among the dozens of people injured in the terrorist attack at a Hanukkah celebration in Australia’s Bondi Beach, his Crown Heights uncle told The Post.

Leibel Lazaroff, a 20-year-old who grew up on the Texas A&M college campus with his Chabad rabbi father, was shot in the abdomen and leg and remained in “critical but stable condition,” his uncle Zalman Lazaroff, 51, said.

“He still has shrapnel in his abdomen and right thigh, and is intubated and will need another surgery [Monday] to clean out the shrapnel. He lost a lot of blood,” his family was informed on a group chat on WhatsApp.

The young man recently spent a year in his mother’s native Brooklyn, studying in a Crown Heights yeshiva, and had moved to Sydney just about two months ago.

He was at the famous beach on Sunday when Naveed Akram, 24, and his 50-year-old father, Sajid, allegedly stormed a Hanukkah celebration armed with shotguns and a bolt-action rifle, killing at least 15 people and injuring another 40, including children.

Lazaroff, a “popular, smart and spunky kid,” embarked on the adventure of his life around the Jewish high holidays in October, his uncle said.

“He’s only been there for two months,” Zalman said of his nephew, a “talented” pianist and one of nine children.

“He’s an adventurous boy – and Australia was an adventure.”

Lazaroff’s aunt, Leah Loksen, a Crown Heights resident, said that she told her excited nephew that living in Australia was “a once in a lifetime opportunity.”


‘A young Jewish heroine’: Jewish teen recovering in hospital after being shot shielding two young children from Bondi attack
A 14-year-old girl named Chaya has emerged as one of the heroes of Sunday’s Bondi Beach terror attack, which claimed at least 15 lives.

According to United Hatzalah (UH) – Israel’s largest independent, non-profit volunteer emergency medical service – Chaya shielded two young children “saving their lives with extraordinary courage” despite having been shot herself.

A picture shared by UH on Instagram shows Chaya in a hospital bed hugging a teddy bear alongside two volunteers from the organisation’s psychotrauma unit, who arrived to offer “support and strength”.

In a post on X, The Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council said that the young-teen had undergone surgery to remove the bullet and is expected to make a full recovery, calling her “a young Jewish heroine”.

Adding further detail, Israeli news station ILTV reported that Chaya was shot in the leg, and that the mother of the two children she protected was killed in the attack, although authorities are yet to release her name.

A report of the incident on The Jerusalem Post read: “Amid the chaos, Chaya spotted two young children and threw herself on top of them to shield them from the bullets flying through the air. She was shot in the leg but remained on top of the children until help arrived, and she was rushed to a nearby hospital for treatment.”

Reacting to Chaya’s story on X, StandWithUs wrote: “Chaya is a hero, and a reminder to us all to be the light amid the darkness”.

As Jews in Australia and around the world continue to reel from Sunday’s deadly attack, which targeted Jews as they celebrated the first night of Chanukah, new details of pain and heroism are still coming out.


Funeral held for Alex Kleytman, a Holocaust survivor killed in Bondi Beach attack
Mourners gather in Sydney for the funeral of Alex Kleytman, a Ukrainian Holocaust survivor killed in the terror attack on a Hanukkah event at Bondi Beach.

A large number of police are on hand for the funeral, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which reports that mourners wept and gathered around Kleytman’s wife Larisa as his remains were put in the hearse.

Kleytman, 87, was the oldest person killed in the massacre on Sunday. According to his wife, he was killed while shielding her from the bullets with his own body.


First funerals held for Sydney terror victims | 7NEWS
The first three victims of Sunday's terror attack that killed 15 people were laid to rest in Sydney, including Rabbi Eli Schlanger known as the 'Bondi Rabbi', hero Reuven Morrison who threw bricks at the gunman, and Rabbi Yaakov Levitan. The funerals drew hundreds of mourners and dignitaries as Sydney's Jewish community begins the agonising process of farewelling all 15 victims, with 10-year-old Matilda's funeral scheduled next.


The ten minutes that changed Australia forever | Daily Mail
Naveed Akram and his father Sajid Akram allegedly targeted the Jewish event celebrating the first night of Hanukkah, Chanukah By The Sea.

Naveed allegedly shot at attendees from a footbridge near Bondi Pavilion while Sajid moved closer to the event.

Twelve of the 15 victims have been identified in the last 48 hours. They were aged between 10 and 87. Another 22 people remain in hospital.


Bondi community unites in grief after terror attack | 7NEWS
The Bondi community gathered in grief and solidarity following a terrorist attack, with 700 swimmers forming a circle of support and tributes growing at Bondi Pavilion. The Jewish community and locals united in mourning, sharing tears and embraces while determined to heal and restore their sense of safety. Shoes left behind from the attack serve as a stark reminder of the lives lost in this tragic incident.


Ep. 22: Bondi and the Battle Against Antisemitism
In the wake of the horrific antisemitic terror attack at Bondi Beach in Sydney - and amid a global surge in anti-Jewish violence - Lahav and Asher speak this week with former Israeli Special Envoy for Combating Antisemitism Michal Cotler-Wunsh about the “eighth front” of the war that Israel and the Jewish People are facing. Cotler-Wunsh - now CEO of the International Legal Forum—delivers a bracing, no-holds-barred assessment of how antisemitism has been normalized, why anti-Zionism is today’s most dangerous strain of this ancient hatred, and how governments, universities, and social media platforms are failing to enforce their own laws and policies.

Cotler-Wunsh lays out the concrete legal, policy, and law-enforcement measures democracies must adopt now—starting with the full implementation of the IHRA definition of antisemitism—and explains how international law has been hijacked and weaponized against Israel and other democracies fighting terror. Cotler-Wunsh also warns about the malign role of state actors such as Qatar and Turkey, whose Islamist propaganda and funding fuel extremism.

In the episode’s opening segment, Lahav and Asher reflect on how the Bondi attack hit close to home, including the injury of Misgav Senior Fellow Arsen Ostrovsky. Asher also shares firsthand insights from recent reserve duty in Gaza, recounting the discovery of Hamas uniforms, training manuals, and stolen pillows from an Israeli hospital inside the home of a Hamas terrorist.

This is a sobering but urgent conversation about courage, effective action, and why antisemitism is not just a Jewish problem—but a warning sign for every democracy.


Is an Islamist attack on the scale we saw in Australia going to arrive here again and soon?
Hugh talks with Andrew C. McCarthy who wrote “Willful Blindness” in 2008 on the absolute need to understand the ideology if the USA was going to defend against the threat.


‘Stained our nation forever’: Bondi warning signs were there for ‘everyone to see’
Former treasurer Josh Frydenberg says the Bondi Beach massacre was a failure of Australian leadership.

“This was a complete failure,” Mr Frydenberg told Sky News host Sharri Markson.

“To root out this radical Islamist ideology that has taken hold in Australia.”


‘You have failed us’: Josh Frydenberg blasts Albanese in speech after Bondi massacre
Former treasurer Josh Frydenberg has demanded Prime Minister Anthony Albanese take action on antisemitism after the Bondi Beach terror attack.


‘Absolutely despicable’: Sarah Ferguson blasted for ‘offensive’ question to Josh Frydenberg
Sky News host Paul Murray claims ABC host Sarah Ferguson’s question to Josh Frydenberg was “disgraceful.”

“She immediately started to backpedal,” Mr Murray said.

“To end like that, that was the plan.”


Albanese government has ‘catastrophically failed’ the Jewish community
Sky News contributor Jaimee Rogers says the Albanese government has “catastrophically failed” the Jewish community.

Ms Rogers told Sky News host Peta Credlin that Australians have been “crying out for leadership”.

“And the fact that he is now nowhere to be seen.”




Jewish bakery shuts down after Bondi attack
Avner’s Owner Ed Halmagyi has decided to shut down his bakery after the massacre of Jewish Australians in Bondi.




‘Nothing is going to change’: ABC blasted for biased reporting
Filmmaker Ami Horowitz condemns ABC, which has been criticised for biased reporting, stating "nothing is going to change".

“I’ve seen this movie before, this is nothing new,” Mr Horowitz told Sky News Digital Presenter Gabriella Power.

“We have to protect ourselves.”


ABC journalist blasted for ‘ridiculous’ comments on Bondi Beach terrorist attack
Sky News contributor James Bolt calls out ABC journalist Laura Tingle for suggesting the actions of the Bondi terrorists were “not based on their religion”.

“Time and time again, we see ABC people say statements, I mean, Laura Tingle has form, she once called Australia a racist country,” Mr Bolt told Sky News host Danica De Giorgio.

“There has to be some sort of repercussion internally within the ABC.”


‘Disgraceful’ BBC article describes intifada as a ‘largely unarmed uprising’
The BBC has been accused of whitewashing violence against Israelis after describing the First Intifada as a “largely unarmed and popular uprising” in a report on new police measures banning the slogan “globalise the intifada”.

The claim appeared in an article explaining why Manchester and London police forces have moved to act against the phrase, which Jewish groups regard as a call to violence.

The original version of the article, published on Wednesday, stated: “The term intifada came into popular use during the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1987.”

It went on to the claim that the intifada was mostly unarmed.

“It was a largely unarmed and popular uprising that continued until the early 1990s. The intifada also saw the development of groups outside the control of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) - notably Hamas.

“The Second Intifada began in September 2000 after a controversial visit by Ariel Sharon, then opposition leader, to a holy site in Jerusalem.

“It is sometimes referred to as ‘al-Aqsa intifada’ after the al-Aqsa Mosque in the Haram al-Sharif site, known to Jews as Temple Mount,” the article went on.

It made no reference to the hundreds of bombings, shootings and hand-grenade attacks carried out during the two intifadas, a sustained wave of violence that claimed the lives of more than 1,000 Israelis.

Among the atrocities was a suicide bombing at a crowded pizzeria, which killed 16 people and left a further 130 wounded.

A newer version of the BBC story, updated on Wednesday afternoon, appeared to give two interpretations of the word.

It suggested that the term is understood by some as “a call for peaceful resistance to Israel's occupation,” while others consider the phrase “a call for violence against Jewish people”.

The BBC has been slammed for both versions of the article, which critics claim downplay Palestinian terrorism.

Danny Cohen, former director of BBC Television, said: "This is appalling. It is deeply offensive to the families of those murdered in the intifada - more than 1,000 were slaughtered by terrorists during that bleak time. This will undoubtedly be very distressing to many in the Jewish community.

“The BBC continues to claim it has no problems with anti-Israel bias. This is yet more disgraceful evidence that is not the case. The antisemitic violence Jewish people are experiencing around the world, as we saw just last weekend, is given fuel by this kind of false reporting.”






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